Music was the first significant window to the cultural vibrancy and important issues of the world for Paul van Dyk, who was raised under the shadow of the Berlin Wall, so he doesnâ€™t exactly have much patience for those who specialize in the disposable.

â€œI grew up in East Germany and I always used to listen to the radio when I did my homework,â€ he remembers. â€œThe only way to connect with free society and the outside world was the radio. Music changed my life when I was 10-years-old. Radio DJs are the ones who opened up my connection to the world.â€

His sixth studio album EVOLUTION, is a product of extensive time in the studioâ€” and far more time spent on the road traveling the globe. A great part of the album was developed and refined while performing and composing live in front of audiences worldwide. Itâ€™s connecting threads build upon decades of watching the electronic dance music scene grow and change.

â€œMusic, for me, was always the playground for something new,â€ he says. â€œWhen I started nearly 20 years ago, the DJ was the freak in the corner while everybody else in the room had fun,â€ he recalls. â€œNow, obviously itâ€™s a very different perspective on what electronic music is, and now Iâ€™m literally composing songs live in front of my audiences. I couldnâ€™t have done any of it without all of the other artists putting out their idea of what electronic music is, and thatâ€™s what makes our musical genre so unique.â€

In a music industry landscape where albums are strategically marketed dispassionately with certain guest stars, this albumâ€™s many collaborations were chosen without pressure of including certain names and only with the actual music in mind. â€œItâ€™s not a marketing-driven collaboration. There is not a single song where a manager said, â€˜Oh, you should work with that person.â€™ I donâ€™t believe in that. For me it always has to be about having a connection to the person I work with.â€

International boundaries were also of no concern thanks to the power of creating songs both in person and via the Internet with his collaborators. Among EVOLUTIONâ€™s guests are Ummet Ozcan, a Turkish producer from the Netherlands who appears on â€œDae Yorâ€; Sue McLaren, a British folk/dance vocalist who sings on â€œThe Sun After Heartbreakâ€ and â€œWe Come Togetherâ€ in a tone that van Dyk says will make â€œâ€¦you want to close your eyes and drift awayâ€; Adam Young, a Minneapolis artist best known as Owl City; and Italyâ€™s Giuseppe Ottaviani, a trusted longtime collaborator.

â€œThe reason why electronic music in itself is really the first global music culture is the fact that it is based on the latest in technology and technology doesnâ€™t have any boundaries,â€ van Dyk explains. â€œElectronic music, for me, was always about breaking boundaries on the technology side as well as the music side. Whatever I do in Berlin has an impact in Singapore, Sydney, Argentina, New York, or Los Angeles at the same time.

â€œPeople are networking and this is the way to do it,â€ he asserts. â€œWhen we work together, these worlds collide and something interesting happens that we can never predict.â€

Austin Leeds, a Miami-based DJ/producer who previously collaborated with van Dyk on â€œNew York Cityâ€ from his last studio album In Between, joins the album for the intense and punchy floor fillers â€œSymmetriesâ€ and â€œVerano.â€

â€œI think I came across Austin about six or seven years ago and he had a very special and distinctive sound,â€ van Dyk says. â€œThereâ€™s a sunny Miami bass vibe to it and Iâ€™m coming more from the darker, Berlin underground side, and when we work together you find both sides there but not in a separate way. It belongs together.â€

Arty joins for â€œThe Oceanâ€ and â€œThe Sun after Heartbreak.â€ The Russian DJ/producerâ€™s own tracks were making frequent appearances in van Dykâ€™s DJ sets, and he came up early as a natural choice for collaboration. The two pushed each other into unexpected sonic territory. â€œWhy canâ€™t two people who are usually pigeonholed as trance artists work together and come up with a drum and bass track?â€ he says of â€œThe Sun after Heartbreakâ€ â€œAll of this stereotyping is not important when thereâ€™s this magical, musical moment.â€

EVOLUTION is van Dykâ€™s first major offering since 2007â€™s In Between, but during the years since that album release the deep involvement in and commitment to recorded output has continued, including various DJ mixes, a comprehensive retrospective, and nurturing other artists on VANDIT, his now 12-year-old independent record label.

Paul van Dyk has spent more than half his life as a composer and DJ. This journey of art and passion has led him to perform in front of an estimated over three million people each year. Part of the secret to his longevity is that he is what he represents.

For van Dyk, a Grammy nominee, recipient of many superlative honors, and seller of millions of records worldwide, EVOLUTION is simply a statement of recording on his own terms, simply for the love of meaningful music devised in connection with the global pulse of his international community. With so much of the foundation of this album composed while interacting with audiences around the world, EVOLUTION is also an ode to interconnectedness in a fresh and exciting new way.